There’s a smug feeling in our profession. A sense of entitlement and accomplishment, and inevitably for some, an assumption of superiority.

It’s true, most lawyers have undergone extensive education and training, often in high-stress environments, and presumably have developed some technical skills as it relates to their practice. But despite all of this, a lawyer simply may not be as intelligent as their local barista.

I will pause here for a minute to define intelligence[1] as proposed by Howard Gardner, along various modalities often overlooked in legal practice:

Spatial

Linguistic

Logical-mathematical

Bodily-kinesthetic

Musical

Interpersonal

Intrapersonal

Naturalistic

Arguably some of these have limited relevance to legal practice, and therefore should be overlooked. But the interpersonal trait is often associated with a term called Emotional Intelligence (EI), the relevance of which to practice has been described on Slaw[2] by Linda K. Robertson[3]. Connie Crosby[4] has also pointed out[5] the importance of EI in mediation and arbitration.

We physicians spend thousands of hours memorizing Latin words, learning to recognize signs and symptoms of illness. We spend thousands more familiarizing ourselves with tests and treatments—with medication side effects, surgical indications and whatnot. But outside of psychiatry training, or the rare enlightened medical school, we don’t even receive a fraction of the training that Starbucks employees receive about how to recognize and respond to people when they express negative emotion.

Replace the word physician with lawyer, medical terminology with legal, and we have a similar symptomatology. The treatment comes from your local Starbucks, not in your Venti Latte, but in what is referred to as “The Latte Method.” Ubel recites Starbucks’ mantra as disclosed in Charles Duhigg’s book, The Power of Habit[7]:

We Listen to the customer, Acknowledge their complaint, Take action by solving the problem, Thank them, and then Explain why the problem occurred.

Wait, you thank your client for complaining? Has that happened in a law firm ever, anywhere on the planet?

I’ve mentioned this approach previously[8] in context of high-conflict personality clients, but the reality is that as a service industry legal professionals can still improve considerably on the actual services they provide. Ubel explores further the collaborative relationship with patients/clients in his book[9]. Making difficult decisions, where the “right” choice is highly dependent on the client’s specific values and preferences, requires effective communication. But effecting communication requires EI and a recognition by the professional that the client’s emotions related to their legal problems are as important as their legal problems themselves.

Ubel wonders whether Starbucks employment should be a necessary prerequisite for medical school admissions. The abysmal legal job market in the U.S. already has some lawyers[10] working as baristas, so we may be one step ahead. All jokes aside, Marie Maron[11], acting director of student programs at Osler Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, has emphasized here on Slaw[12] the importance of EI to their recruitment process, and for success within the firm. Historically though, EI has been valued more for internal relationships within the firm and possibly client development than it has for the actual provision of services.

You’ll recall that the bulk of legal malpractice claims[13] stem from or are based on miscommunication. Spending that extra time is difficult in a busy and hectic practice, but perhaps we all need a coffee break The Latte Method to take scope and address the bigger picture.

To borrow from another physician analogy in Luke 4:23, it’s time we tell ourselves, “Lawyer, heal thyself.”